Kinka Lucky

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The Lucky (ラッキー) or Kinka Lucky (錦華ラッキー) is a Japanese camera taking 3×4cm exposures on 127 film. It was released by Yamamoto Shashinki Kōsakusho in late 1935 and advertised until 1937.[1]

General description

The Kinka Lucky is inspired from the Picny, itself copying the Gewirette by Wirgin. It has a rounded metal body and a telescopic tube supporting the lens and shutter assembly.

The top plate supports the advance knob on the right end, a key to open the camera, a tubular optical finder slightly offset to the left and a round plate on the left end. The top plate is removed for film loading, like the Picny and in the same spirit as the bottom loading of the Leica screw models.

Advertising

The camera was offered simply as the Lucky in an advertisement in Asahi Camera July 1936.[2] Two versions are presented and pictured: f/6.3 (¥22.50) and f/4.5 (¥33). Both have a folding optical finder, whose front part is inscribed Lucky and folds above the rear one.

In an advertisement in the January 1937 issue of the same magazine, the camera is offered as the Kinka Lucky and more details are given about the two versions:[3]

Actual examples

The two only known surviving examples are pictured in Sugiyama.

The f/6.3 example is similar to the camera pictured in the January 1937 advertisement.[6] It looks like it has a focusing helical at the base of the telescopic tube. The settings 2 and 5 are visible but they are very far apart and this hardly looks like a distance scale.

The shutter is everset and gives T, B, 100, 50, 25 speeds, selected by turning the rim. The lens name is written on the shutter plate, like on the Picny. It begins with ORIENTAL OPTICAL CERONAR and probably continues with the lens aperture and focal length. The shutter plate is also written MADE BY Y.C.E.W. TOKYO. Some of the initials certainly stand for Yamamoto, Camera and Works but the meaning of the "E" is unclear.

The f/4.5 example is similar to the f/4.5 Lucky presented in the July 1936 advertisement, except for the tubular finder.[7] It has a front-cell focusing lens and the base of the telescopic tube is plainly screwed to the body. The lens is an Anastigmat Trionar 50/4.5 and the aperture is set by an index at the bottom. The shutter is a dial-set Elka, marked ELKA on the speed setting wheel. The shutter plate also has a logo on the right, perhaps reading TB. The release lever is attached to the front of the shutter housing, and there is also a distant release connector on the side and a hole at the bottom, probably for a thread and needle release device (a crude replacement for a self-timer).

Notes

  1. Dates: Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p.335. The camera was featured in the new products column of the December 1935 issue of Asahi Camera.
  2. Advertisement reproduced in Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p.102.
  3. Advertisement reproduced in Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p.67.
  4. Name inferred from the katakana トリオナー.
  5. Name inferred from the katakana ヴァルダー.
  6. Sugiyama, item 3027.
  7. Sugiyama, item 3026.

Bibliography

Original documents

Recent sources